If you don't know it already, Wikileaks is a wiki site for leaks. It's big news - things like the US unpublished rules of engagement for Iraq and all manner of political and corporate whistleblowing get leaked there. It's where you go if you've got the minutes from a really juicy meeting and want it public with your identity protected.
Recently they tickled a Cayman Islands bank by leaking some of their stuff (alleged money-laundering leaked by a former exec)... and got savaged by lawyers. Down, down went the site, for the judge ruled that the hosting ISP:
"shall immediately clear and remove all DNS hosting
records for the wikileaks.org domain name and prevent the
domain name from resolving to the wikileaks.org website or
any other website or server other than a blank park page,
until further order of this Court."Slap! Take that, you naughty web anarchists!
Of course, taking down the DNS doesn't take down the
site, as any fule kno. You may enjoy the
Streissand Effect gloatfest here at:
http://88.80.13.160/wiki/Main_Page.
And of course, as soon as word got out (and Wikileaks is very popular) mirror sites were spawned like a rash. Which means that they effortlessly survived the DOS attack
and the fire at their colocation host's UPS. And Wikileaks, very much alive and well, plans to put up as much as it can possibly find about corrupt Cayman banking.
Ah, le chortle.
Hey, Anonymous, these guys are the real deal. "Oh fuck, the Internet is here" is not a bunch of goons exercising of a grudge in V masks, though the masks are a
really nice touch. "Oh fuck, the Internet is here" is this sort of thing: credible, robust, serious, unstoppable and making real the
omniopticon that really does kill privacy dead dead dead.